Non-fiction narrative structure: what the best writers get right
The experience of reading a book slowly over many months — not because it's difficult but because you're choosing not to rush it — is a different experience from reading quickly, and some books deserve the slow approach.
I spent seven months on Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey-Maturin series, reading one novel per month and not reading the next until the month turned. The spacing was arbitrary at first but became meaningful. The long gaps between voyages felt real. The returns to familiar characters after a month away had the quality of reunion.
Deliberate slow reading works for series that have internal rhythm — that are organized around cycles of departure and return, crisis and resolution. The Aubrey-Maturin books are organized around voyages, and reading one per month aligned the reading rhythm with the narrative rhythm.
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